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â„¢ tf-i l _Â«â– __..Â«. ~^. l ________ jt-tii ]('. . Chicago and vicinity to-day i_w l v generally fair ar.d warm with max 1 ts v mum about 84 degrees thursday y-i v il partly cloudy and continued warm jw mb . h jjrtd moderate to brisk southerly winds mf vol viii no 223 a m â€¢ * Chicago examiner wednesday Chicago september /. 1910 14 pages wldnesday regi stered m d s i'atepc office j exceptional barpins m wia are offered daily in the musical in fum struments columns of ttie examiner Â£-, j v v v3r if you wish to get a new or second \-_ j v hand piano at a very moderate price /â– * m reaa the opant jlds â‚¬ prirf onf cfnt delivered by carrier rr.l ui inc _.___. . i 30 ce[its p f r mouth ; hines exit asked in st paul as lorimer aid k Illinois delegation demands m conservation congress oust m him to preserve state name f isher leads the attack deneen declares mention of unfair politics sufficient to drop lumberman st paul sept 6 lllinois political scandals broke into the conservation con gress here to day and dominated it even eclipsing colonel theodore roosevelt and those scandals are still before the con gress and promise to bring on one of the bhtterest fights the body has ever known edward hines close friend of senator william lorimer got into the unpleasant lime light and is the person about whom the fight is waged he ha been the chair man of the credentials committee and the Illinois delegation dominated by governor lieneen demanded of him that he should retire hines admitted that his name had been bandied about in connection with the lori mer-t.ee o'neil browne white jackpot charges but declared his innocence and flatly refused the demand to efface himself from the congress so __. formal resolution was adopted by the Illinois delegation ask ' lng the congress to throw him out of the position he has held that was the start thc finish is not in eight it is as if tiie political duel be tween the lorimer and deneen factions of the Illinois republicans had been transferred from its home state to min nesota hines represents the lorimer side upon the other side is the gov ernor himself backed by walter l fisher kellogg fairbank and the whole Illinois icoimniuee appointed by the governor fairbanks signs demand the resolution parsed by the Illinois delegation was signed by kellogg fair bank secretary of the delegation and was addressed to president b bf baker it read resolved by hie delegates from illi nois that without reflecting in any way upon mr hines his appointment to the committee upon credentials is inoppor tune and we respectfully suggest the ap pointment of another member by the president of lhe congress the resolution was passed aftcr a blister ing fight in the committee in which hines jefended himself stoutly but thc plan to put it through was cut and dried it had been agreed upon as soon as he had re fused a gentle hint to retiic in the committee on credentials the reso lution was preseuted by john t len festy the Chicago miller and hines got up and denounced it as a star chamber at tempt to rob him nf an honor he hod not solicited and said the animus was political it is true he snlu that my name has been associated in a more or less public manner with the alleged use of money in the election of senator lorimer hut there has never been an iota of proof that any of the charges so freely made were true and i stand here prepared to defend ni.v elf against them i refuse to be bouud by the action of ibe committee mentioning called sufficient Â» walter l fisher answered he said it is not the purpose or intention of the tomniittee to accuse mr hines the diffi culty lies iu the fact that mr hines has admitted to wit tbat his name bas been mentioned in the connection referred to and the action of the committee is of a character that should commend itself to . mr hines since the chairmanship of the committee as he will agree is of necessity an office that must uot be opeu to even unjustified criticism this thing is being rammed down my throat hines is reported to have said i have nothing to apologize for and noth ing to confess i shall not retire ln the face of the implied accusation governor deneen at first declined to ad mit that any such a'ction had been taken by the credentials committee but later aid it is highly important that there should e no opening for the critics of this inove / ment to attack the Illinois delegation be cause of any rumors however ill-founded against any member of the body and es pecially against its chairman i have nothing more to say dickinson at hongkong war seoretary amazed nt filipinos strides as seen on visit special table to the examiner hong kong sept o jacob m dick inson united states secretary of war ar rived here to-day declaring that he had the larger part of the philippines had seen more than any other man in the same length of time secretary dickinson said he was astonished at the great development of the country and be lieves tliere is a bright future ahead for the sugar and tobacco industries the whole party is well and is proceeding to shanghai thursday next unknown american woman in train pcetei cable to the examiner bokdkal'x france sept 6 m,s aiin.c saglio an american woman ie onrti i to-day she had been robbed t â– â– . welry valued at j-o,ouo in a train bcuiid lcjfclon â– 1 edward hines kills guard robs city train in 10 minutes lone holdup man hurls body of vic tim from car leaps off in fu sillade at st louis station s3 louis sept 6 known as the pa cific coast express passenger train no 15 on the (.'., b & q railroad that left at u:01 to-night for st joseph mo and the west was boarded at i_nion station by a lone robber who killed and threw overboard the flagman j m wine of st louis and held up the porter who came back to let the flagman in the robber ordered the porter to turn out the lights in his car which the thief then entered robbing four passengers and leaving the train at the carr street station ou the levee the victim was to have been married this week the entire time consumed in the murder robbery and escape was not more than ten minutes the robber burst into the car tiring through the roof and windows as he went and commanded the passengers to hold up their bauds he had robbed four passen gers when the train slowed up firing a parting fusillade the robber leaped into thc darkness and made good his escape the passengers on the train describe the robber as a tall cadaverous man wearing a tall black derby bat a blue handkerchief as a mask and a stubble beard of about three days growth rush u s ships to colon orders to lvl.nraerna peacemakers ollo_v panama election kend washington d c sep the estrada faction has completed the sub jugation of its opponents in nicaragua the republic is now peaceful and the united states has hurried its cruisers and marines froni greytown bluefields and corinto to colon panama officials of the state department deny the extra ma rines are desired at panama because of the approaching elections and the trouble over the presidential candidacy of act ing president mendoza reports to the state department are that lewis is to be elected commander davis reports that the madriz forces everywhere have sur rendered ragtime revised by 400 newport i>n sices to the grizzly bear cakewalk newport r 1 sept 6 ragtime has returned to newport and it will be heard in the fashionable affairs given in new york this winter for it was introduced by henri conrad director of conrad's metro politan orchestra at the dinner dance giveu saturday night by mr snd mrs f lath rop ames at the newport golf club the uew rag dance is called the grizzly bear and is on the order of the usual cakewalk ragtime but there is a turn like a waltz movement at regular intervals nnd it is danced in couples newport hadn't danced to ragtime for seven years w holman-hunt is ill anions london artist's condition k.-i ,:_<â– , ons is 83 years old â– special able to the kxaminer london sept 6 william hobnnn hunt o im the celebrated painter is dangerously ill mr holman hunt has not been in aiili for many nunths nnd last he wr,s seriously ill but rallied 11 83 years old and ' s the ouly survlv ree founders of the pre-rnph movement tlie tbert were rossetti anti millais mr holman hunt wi\s one â– â– : i.-it members of the order of merit forest park votes out fight pictures drastic ordinance is passed after bitter clash between trustees and president crowd cheers approval village purged of brutal sports despite desperate fight led by mohr amid pandemonium in which trustees hurled epithets at the president of the vil lage board of forest park and the presi dent returned like epithet an ordinance forbidding the exhibition of flght pictures prize fighting and wrestling was passed last night totally ignoring the strenuous effeorts of president h . mohr to quash the ordinance and later to have it set aside until a future meeting the trustees headed by e h cruce unanimously passed the ordinance hich sounds the death knell of future exhibitions of the jeffries-johnson flght pictures in the vil lage of forest park there was a cry of approval from the two hundred residents of the village who attended the board meeting as the last trustee voted aye cry of derision for mohr a cry of derision greeted president mohr when an amendment to the ordinance was voted upon and lost and he made an at tempt to kill the ordinance by feigning that he thought the board was voting on the ordinance immediately five of the six trustees arose to their feet and ex changed words with the president you're out of order shouted the presi dent rapping his gavel on his desk i knew i was out of order before i stood up but i know there is prize-fighting going on in this town and a law must be made to stop it returned trustee war necki warnecki was forced out of megurn'3 saloon last week at the point of a gun when be attempted to stop a prize flgat you seem to know the game shouted trustee warnecki as the president tried to quash the ordinance under a pretense by a dolitical trick you bet i do responded mohr and i'm proud of it two hundred citizens left the town hail where the meeting was held laud ing the action of the trustees denouncing the president of the village board la menting the incrense in undesirables and criticising the actions of negroes since the pictures have been exhibited in forest park efforts to have the ordinance take effect at once failed after ten days all films of an immoral nature will be prohibited the ordinance provides that any one who shall promote or indulge in a boxing or wrestling exhibition shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and subjected to a flde of not less than 5 and not more than s2oo any one showing or causing to be shown any pictures of fights w_ns tling matches or any immoral piotnre sb_n be subjected to a flne of not less than 10 and uot more than 200 for each and every exhibition mohr seizes ordinance that president mohr was ambitious to keep the action of the village board from the public was manifested by his action aftcr the meeting the recorder wns seen showing the ordinance to an examiner re porter by the president wbo was in the back of the room he ran to the desk and snatching the ord ino uce from the hands of the recorder said here don't give that to the papers that is village property we have bad too much publicity about this already an echo of the clandestine exhibition of the jeffries-johnston fight pictures was heard yesterday wheu edward burke as sistant manager of the congress hotel was arrested for allowing the exhibition of the pictures at the banquet of the dupont pow der company august 26 he will be given a hearing this morniug the police made nn effort to arrest william coyne an offi cial of the powder company who is said to have had charge of the arrangements for the exhibition but he left Chicago the lay after the banquet efforts are being made to ascertain the identity of the operator or those who brought the films to the hotel waukegan 111 sept g.-chlef of po lice conolly to-night prevented a proposed exhibition of jeffries-johnson fight pic tures the playhouse had advertised the films before cousulting the chief abruzzi lottery winner unite promises 18,000 prize to girl waif who sold ticket to him special cable to the kxaminer rome sept 6 the duke d'abruzzi to day learned that his generosity to a little girl beggar had netted him 18,000 it appears that some time ago the waif meeting the duke on the street asked him to buy a lottery ticket and the heir to the throne attracted by her bright pretty face did so to-dav he was informed that lhe ticket had drawn a prize of 18,000 lie promptly announced that he intended giv ing the prize to the little girl who sold him the ticket j r keene is improving family physician engngea entire floor of hospital lexington ky sept 0.-j-ir . r keene the millionaire financier ml turf man of new york who was stricken with pneumonia saturday is sll b tly im proved his condition ls still regarded as serious foxhall keene his so ls at his father's bedside dr barr -. of new lork mr keene's family detail says bis parent ls n yep sick man su keene's jjg^^in has aged aij entire h__l i ______________ loftis kills rancher in fight over horse former employe and reputed relative of diamond mer chants alleges self-defense victim warned by slayer wife of president of Chicago co says young man has been in west 3 years bakersfield cal sept 6 following a trivial quarrel over the beating of a horse j c loftis 27 years old a rider employed by the kern county land com pany sunday shot and killed joseph laf ferty a milk dealer loftis surrendered he alleges self defense loftis is said to be the scion of a wealthy Chicago family his brothers are large diamond merchants three years ago he is said to have been sent here to ride for the land company to get him away from evil influences he mode good with his employers and was transferred from one ranch to another finally coming to the itosedale ranch where the shooting oc curred loftis is alleged to have mistreated a horse a hitter quarrel with latferty en sued and loftis vowed revenge the next morniug as he hitched up a light wagon he is alleged to have insulted latferty who was fifty feet away milking loftis language became unbearable to lafferty and he started toward loftis who drew his revolver and warned lafferty to keep away loftis fires shot in air the latter still advanced when loftis fired a shot into the air but lafferty did net stop a witness says loftis then backed off fifteen or twenty feet still hold ing the gun warningly at lafferty but lafferty refused to heed then loftis shot lafferty was from massachusetts having relatives at springfield and haverhill lof tis-refused to discuss the shooting the officers think him insane mrs samuel t a loftis said last night that the loftis family has heard nothing of the shooting except what they have read in the newspapers the young man is john clifford loftis said mrs loftis he has been in the west for the past two or three years he went there for his health previously be was an employe of loflls bros __ co we have heard from him at regular in tervals the reports are wrong ln saying he was sent west by his brothers loftis shooting recalled the loftis brothers have had their share of notoriety in the past few years joseph s loftis a member of the loftis com pany wns married a few years ago in joliet to miss ida kincaid about two years ago following action at a director's meeting of the loftis company ousting bim as vice president joseph shot nud slightly wounded his brother samuel t v loftis president of the concern he also shot several holes in his brother's clothingttud inflicted a slight scalp wound with the butt of his revolver a few months ago mrs ida kincaid lof tis was made defendant in a 25,000 suit for damages brought by mrs john wal lace oliver wbo charged her with alienat ing the affections of mr oliver mrs oliver's discovery of her husband and mrs loftis dining in the annex was said at the time to be responsible for the trouble u.s to have war dogs wood confers with i ft regarding training of canines for army washington d c sept 6 war dogs may be introduced into the united states army service as they have been found to be useful in the armies of ger many and france general leonard wood returned from beverly to-day after a con ference with president Taft and will take the matter up with his staff experts the number of war dogs to be trained or the method of their organization have not been developed in detail general wood secured i the consent of president Taft to recruit the army to its full minimum strength of 87,000 men bowers not in danger doctor for Chicago treasury of ficial denies he is seriously 111 _ boston sept g.-solicitor general lloyd w bowers of the united states treasury ill at the hotel touraine here with bronchitis is not in any danger is the positive declaration of dr frederic cog geshall who is attending him mrs bowers is with her husband she says he has been troubled with bronchitis most of the summer ward on way home lake front defender and family to be in Chicago this week montgomery ward who with his wife and daughter have been spending several months nt their summer home in los an geles is expected to arrive in Chicago the latter part of the week the family left liis angeles last night over the santa fe for Chicago seek poison in mrs badsing's body wife no 1 died in like mystery physicians advised autopsy in previous case both women's lives were insured karl a badsing a young stationer of 2339 west north avenue whose bride mabel reid badsiug died august 15 under circumstances which the police consider suspicious is still held an unbooked pris oner at the west north avenue police station the police await a report of professor e r le count and dr w o hunter who are making a chemical analysis of the young woman's viscem before taking fur ther action against badsing this report is expected some time to-day the most suspicious circumstances un covered yesterday by the detectives at work on the case under lieutenant lnrkin was the striking similarity in the illnesses of mabel reid badsing nnd his flrst wife who was mary mcconnell the police learned that dr o m holliday 101 nine teenth avenue who attended the flrst mrs badsing during the early part of her ill ness advised that her death be investi gated soon after it occurred in october 1907 he was overruled by the woman's relatives and badsing continued to live in the home of his wife's mother until bis second marriage give points of similarity here are some of the points of similarity iich the police hnve found in the two deaths in badsing's family both women were taken sick after eating and their illness was ascribed to ptomaine poisoning both women were attended during portions of their illness by their mothers under the care of the mothers each patient seemed to improve re lapses followed the mother's departure in each instance the attending physicians wei-j puzzled in both cases by mysterious relapses when their patients seemed on the road to recovery badsing carried insurance on both wives though the amount in the case of the first wife was but 167 the in surance ou the second wife's life was 2,000 mrs william mcconnell 910 twentieth street mother of badsing's first wife in a peculiar interview given an examiner reporter last night asserted her belief in badsing's innocence ln one breath and in the next detailed seemingly suspicious circumstances attending the illness and death of her daughter each thought other rich my daughter mary was living at home in 1905 when she met karl badsing nnd married him i think that each thought the other had money before they married and the discovery that neither had any thing was disappointing they quarreled some for a time but afterward seemed to get along well together my daughter was taken sick on october s and was brought to my home we called in dr o m holliday of melrose park who attended her until october us when he pronounced her ont of danger she re karl badsing and brides whose deaths under peculiar and similar cir cumstances are being investigated by the police at left mrs badsing no 2 right mrs badsing no 1 __ jessica love post asks decree in west daughter-in-law of million aire charges cruelty and extreme poverty los ngeles sept 6 when jessica lore married julius post in the kenwood hotel Chicago june 12 1902 and sur prised her family and friends with an nouncements that she had wed the eldest son of c m post the.v all exclaimed you'll not live together long he will not support you to-day jessica love post after eight years of what she terms most humiliating and unrestful married life and her pretty little seven-year-old daughter jessica love post are practically homeless and penni less living with friends she is suing her young husband for divorce and a hearing for temporary alimony pending decision will come before the superior court next monday extreme cruelty shooting with a revol ver and tearing and burning away part of her switch and pompadour forcing lier to accept the presence of obnoxious women iu her home compelling ber to entertain and cook for stable hands and ranch em ployes and beating her on the face and body are some of the grounds upon which mrs post in her complaint asks for abso lute divorce the custody of lier little girl 100 a month alimony and 250 lawyers fees â– julius post's father and mother own one of the handsomest homes of pasadena also the large de la estrella ranch up iu lancaster it is to this ranch that mr post senior sent the young people iu the hope of mak ing his son strong and well and self-sup porting i remember the case well said e m aholtz manager of the kenwood hotel , last night at the time of the marriage most people realty did say that young post would not live long in happiness with his young bride i do uot remember just why every one seemed to think that this would be so but i guess it was because be was a more than usually gay young fel low mrs chanler explains cavalieri wires hushand a route nnd signs old name new vork sept 6 the publication of the story of robert chanler leaving paris for new york without his bride lina cavalieri led the friends of both to watch the incoming steamers to-dny for the solitary bridegroom they ilid not find him and the reason is given in the follow ing pertinent dispatch sent by mrs can ler although she does not so sjgu her self bob chnnler left paris for londou last tuesday thence weut to bristol whence he sailed on wednesday hy the canadian hue his sister-in-law mrs willie chan ler went with him chanler is going to new york igo to cabourg signed paris sept & oavaliebi i la follette is nominated burrows beaten insurgents win overwhelming victory in wsconsin dead man named attorney gen eral governorship in doubt currier insurgent and sullo way old guard nominated in new hampshire john a mead governor of vermont standpatters lose in michi gan where progressives roil up big majorities os borne named for governor stand pat republicans will sit up and take notice when they read the newspapers this morning insurgency was in the air yesterday in three states where primaries were held â€” wisconsin michigan nnd new hampshire and in the vermont elections the usual republican majority of ooo was cut in two the returns are not nearly all in yet but information early this morning was senator robert s lafollette renominated in wisconsin by a vote of 3 to 1 senator julius caesar burrows of michi gan defeated for renomination by repre sentative charles a townsend a near-in surgent by a fairly close vote j p bass insurgent candidate for gov ernor of xew hampshire a brother of john f bass of Chicago successful by a vote of 2 to 1 william h stafford btnndpat member for the fifth wisconsin district defeated by henry cochems insurgent lafollett enthusiast and football hero option loses in wisconsin county option defeated in wisconsin by nn overwhelming majority the nomina tion for governor is not certain but it lies between e t fairchild who calla bimself a Taft man instead of a stand patter and v ____. mcgovern a lafollette supporter william m lewis the automo bile man who championed county option is a bad third a dead man frank t tucker who com mitted suicide too late to chauge the bal lots is nominated for attorney general on lie republican ticket ln wisconsin chase s osborne progressive nominated for governor of michigan he ran far ahead of townsend for senator in voting for tucker the dead man the lafollette men vindicated his name he was involved bis friends said unjustly tn the stamped envelope scandal and killed himself after the ballots were out the lafollette men intend to have the state central committee name a man in his place but that action will be contested iu the courts the returns from both wisconsin nnd michigan are far from complete so far only the beads of the tickets of both par tiesi hnve been counted and it is hard to tell just what the final count would show old members renominated . the last returns from wisconsin in dicated that all the old members of congress had been renominated except stafford cochem's plurality was placed at a few thousand also late information was that mcgovern was leading fair child for governor and that he might he nominated hy less than 2,000 while the lafollette followers are jubilant and the returns show there ls no doubt that he has carried the state by au overwhelming majority still they admit they are not out of the woods they will wait until all returns on legislative nom inees are iu before they make absolute claims of success if tbey do not get a clear majority of their own men they are afraid the stand put members may combine with the demo crats to beat lafollette when the legisla ture meets in january townsend holds lead returns from michigan were very slow in coming iu one reason being that in de troit the primaries were open until 10 p ni the estimate that burrows had been beaten by townsend was based upon up state returns where the vote was appar ently townsend 18,000 burrow 11,000 townsend is also expected to carry de troit the upper peninsula is still to be heard from but burrows will have to carry it almost unanimously ns governor warner did two years ago to win in the congressional primaries the in surgents won a victory ln just one in stance j m c smith defeated con gressman washington gardner for renom ination in the third district in the xew hampshire primary both the old congressmen frank d currier ln surggeut and cy sulloway standpatter ind the biggest man in congress were re nominated a hard tight was made against snllowav but he piled un a big vote in the vermont election dr john a mead wns chosen governor and cougress nieu foster and i'lumly were re-elected returns for governor from 17 out of o election districts including five cities complete give dr john a mend iÃŸepub lican 22.u.1 and charles d watson democrat 12 117 the corresponding vote in 11i0s Â»..Â» pronty republican 30 278 burke ileum rati 11.880 if the proportionate republican loss an,i democratic '- r iiu t!'_s fu p own n main tained in the rest of the state the ke_iu|>lic;in plurality will he about 17,0110 ns compared with s__s4s sjiven prouty in 1903 continued on 4th page 3d column h cut out the in mil m q on page two of ih's fill qthese coupons are orth money to ou

â„¢ tf-i l _Â«â– __..Â«. ~^. l ________ jt-tii ]('. . Chicago and vicinity to-day i_w l v generally fair ar.d warm with max 1 ts v mum about 84 degrees thursday y-i v il partly cloudy and continued warm jw mb . h jjrtd moderate to brisk southerly winds mf vol viii no 223 a m â€¢ * Chicago examiner wednesday Chicago september /. 1910 14 pages wldnesday regi stered m d s i'atepc office j exceptional barpins m wia are offered daily in the musical in fum struments columns of ttie examiner Â£-, j v v v3r if you wish to get a new or second \-_ j v hand piano at a very moderate price /â– * m reaa the opant jlds â‚¬ prirf onf cfnt delivered by carrier rr.l ui inc _.___. . i 30 ce[its p f r mouth ; hines exit asked in st paul as lorimer aid k Illinois delegation demands m conservation congress oust m him to preserve state name f isher leads the attack deneen declares mention of unfair politics sufficient to drop lumberman st paul sept 6 lllinois political scandals broke into the conservation con gress here to day and dominated it even eclipsing colonel theodore roosevelt and those scandals are still before the con gress and promise to bring on one of the bhtterest fights the body has ever known edward hines close friend of senator william lorimer got into the unpleasant lime light and is the person about whom the fight is waged he ha been the chair man of the credentials committee and the Illinois delegation dominated by governor lieneen demanded of him that he should retire hines admitted that his name had been bandied about in connection with the lori mer-t.ee o'neil browne white jackpot charges but declared his innocence and flatly refused the demand to efface himself from the congress so __. formal resolution was adopted by the Illinois delegation ask ' lng the congress to throw him out of the position he has held that was the start thc finish is not in eight it is as if tiie political duel be tween the lorimer and deneen factions of the Illinois republicans had been transferred from its home state to min nesota hines represents the lorimer side upon the other side is the gov ernor himself backed by walter l fisher kellogg fairbank and the whole Illinois icoimniuee appointed by the governor fairbanks signs demand the resolution parsed by the Illinois delegation was signed by kellogg fair bank secretary of the delegation and was addressed to president b bf baker it read resolved by hie delegates from illi nois that without reflecting in any way upon mr hines his appointment to the committee upon credentials is inoppor tune and we respectfully suggest the ap pointment of another member by the president of lhe congress the resolution was passed aftcr a blister ing fight in the committee in which hines jefended himself stoutly but thc plan to put it through was cut and dried it had been agreed upon as soon as he had re fused a gentle hint to retiic in the committee on credentials the reso lution was preseuted by john t len festy the Chicago miller and hines got up and denounced it as a star chamber at tempt to rob him nf an honor he hod not solicited and said the animus was political it is true he snlu that my name has been associated in a more or less public manner with the alleged use of money in the election of senator lorimer hut there has never been an iota of proof that any of the charges so freely made were true and i stand here prepared to defend ni.v elf against them i refuse to be bouud by the action of ibe committee mentioning called sufficient Â» walter l fisher answered he said it is not the purpose or intention of the tomniittee to accuse mr hines the diffi culty lies iu the fact that mr hines has admitted to wit tbat his name bas been mentioned in the connection referred to and the action of the committee is of a character that should commend itself to . mr hines since the chairmanship of the committee as he will agree is of necessity an office that must uot be opeu to even unjustified criticism this thing is being rammed down my throat hines is reported to have said i have nothing to apologize for and noth ing to confess i shall not retire ln the face of the implied accusation governor deneen at first declined to ad mit that any such a'ction had been taken by the credentials committee but later aid it is highly important that there should e no opening for the critics of this inove / ment to attack the Illinois delegation be cause of any rumors however ill-founded against any member of the body and es pecially against its chairman i have nothing more to say dickinson at hongkong war seoretary amazed nt filipinos strides as seen on visit special table to the examiner hong kong sept o jacob m dick inson united states secretary of war ar rived here to-day declaring that he had the larger part of the philippines had seen more than any other man in the same length of time secretary dickinson said he was astonished at the great development of the country and be lieves tliere is a bright future ahead for the sugar and tobacco industries the whole party is well and is proceeding to shanghai thursday next unknown american woman in train pcetei cable to the examiner bokdkal'x france sept 6 m,s aiin.c saglio an american woman ie onrti i to-day she had been robbed t â– â– . welry valued at j-o,ouo in a train bcuiid lcjfclon â– 1 edward hines kills guard robs city train in 10 minutes lone holdup man hurls body of vic tim from car leaps off in fu sillade at st louis station s3 louis sept 6 known as the pa cific coast express passenger train no 15 on the (.'., b & q railroad that left at u:01 to-night for st joseph mo and the west was boarded at i_nion station by a lone robber who killed and threw overboard the flagman j m wine of st louis and held up the porter who came back to let the flagman in the robber ordered the porter to turn out the lights in his car which the thief then entered robbing four passengers and leaving the train at the carr street station ou the levee the victim was to have been married this week the entire time consumed in the murder robbery and escape was not more than ten minutes the robber burst into the car tiring through the roof and windows as he went and commanded the passengers to hold up their bauds he had robbed four passen gers when the train slowed up firing a parting fusillade the robber leaped into thc darkness and made good his escape the passengers on the train describe the robber as a tall cadaverous man wearing a tall black derby bat a blue handkerchief as a mask and a stubble beard of about three days growth rush u s ships to colon orders to lvl.nraerna peacemakers ollo_v panama election kend washington d c sep the estrada faction has completed the sub jugation of its opponents in nicaragua the republic is now peaceful and the united states has hurried its cruisers and marines froni greytown bluefields and corinto to colon panama officials of the state department deny the extra ma rines are desired at panama because of the approaching elections and the trouble over the presidential candidacy of act ing president mendoza reports to the state department are that lewis is to be elected commander davis reports that the madriz forces everywhere have sur rendered ragtime revised by 400 newport i>n sices to the grizzly bear cakewalk newport r 1 sept 6 ragtime has returned to newport and it will be heard in the fashionable affairs given in new york this winter for it was introduced by henri conrad director of conrad's metro politan orchestra at the dinner dance giveu saturday night by mr snd mrs f lath rop ames at the newport golf club the uew rag dance is called the grizzly bear and is on the order of the usual cakewalk ragtime but there is a turn like a waltz movement at regular intervals nnd it is danced in couples newport hadn't danced to ragtime for seven years w holman-hunt is ill anions london artist's condition k.-i ,:_lic;in plurality will he about 17,0110 ns compared with s__s4s sjiven prouty in 1903 continued on 4th page 3d column h cut out the in mil m q on page two of ih's fill qthese coupons are orth money to ou